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Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies
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Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child

Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4

N. Davies

Page 2: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Fever

Definition: Elevation in body temperature

It is not a disease… though it may indicate the presence of disease

It is helpful…defense mechanism

Page 3: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Possible Risks

1. >101 in a newborn (2-3 months old)

2. >105 for a prolonged period of time may lead to dehydration brain injury (rare)

Page 4: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

“Red Flags”

Core body temperature elevated State of arousal Breathing effort State of peripheral circulation Dehydration

fluids taken in and excreted (24 hrs)acute weight loss

Page 5: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Arousal

Observe the child for: signs of drowsiness hypotonia response to stimulation

If the baby cries, note characteristics of the cry weak, whimpering, appears to require undue effort

Page 6: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Dyspnea

Recession of the sternum and chest wall Nasal flaring Respiratory grunting Central cyanosis

NOTE: tachypnea alone is not indicative of serious illness

Page 7: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Peripheral Circulation

Generalized pallor Cold lower legs (knee down)

NOTE: cold hands & feet and mottling of the skin have little or no relationship to serious illness

Page 8: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Estimation of Fluid Intake/Loss

Serious signs: Ingesting <50% of the normal fluid intake <4 wet diapers in a 24 hr period

Page 9: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Estimation of Acute Weight Loss

Compare current weight to expected weight look at the anthropometric chart (percentile) to

determine their expected weight

expected weight - current weight X 100 expected weight

Weight loss of >7.5%... Dehydration Refer to the hospital

Page 10: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Signs of Dehydration

Dry mucous membranes and skin Rapid, weak pulse Pallor or ashen/grey discoloration of the skin Soft, sunken eyeballs Depressed fontanel Poor tissue turgor (tenting) Lethargy Seizures

Page 11: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Uncommon High-risk Signs

Bile-staining vomit Convulsions (especially 1st time) Lump >2 cm in diameter (abdomen)

except hydrocele or umbilical hernia Petechial rash Fecal blood without visible cause

Page 12: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

The following criteria are designed to recognize acute life-threatening illnessesThey are conservative referral criteria with a

wide margin of error…

Page 13: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Assessing the Febrile Child

1. Quality of cry2. Reaction to parent stimulation3. State variation4. Color5. Hydration6. Response to social overtures

A score >12 should be referred for evaluation10… 2.7% serious illness16… 92.3% serious illness

Page 14: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Quality of cry

1 - strong with normal tone; content and not crying

3 - whimpering or sobbing

5 - weak or moaning or high pitched

Page 15: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Reaction to parent stimulation

1 - cries briefly then stops; content and not crying

3 - cries off and on

5 - continuous cry or hardly responds

Page 16: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

State variation

1 - if awake, stays awake; wakes up quickly if stimulated

3 - eyes close briefly, awake; awakes with prolonged stimulation

5 - falls to sleep; will not rouse

Page 17: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Color

1 - pink

3 - pale extremities; acrocyanosis

5 - pale, cyanotic, or ashen

Page 18: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Hydration

1 - skin and eyes normal, mucous membranes moist

3 - skin and eyes normal and mouth slightly dry

5 - skin doughy or tented and dry mucous membranes +/- sunken eyes

Page 19: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Response to social overtures

1 - smiles or alerts (<2 months)

3 - brief smile or alerts briefly (<2 months)

5 - no smile; face anxious, dull, or no alerting (<2 months)

Page 20: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

In practice…

Watch the child during the consultation

Assign the number that best describes the case and enter it in the recordAdd up the 6 scores

Page 21: Recognizing the Seriously Ill Child Chiropractic Pediatrics, Ch. 4 N. Davies.

Summary of Referral Criteria Observational items score >12 Any combination of poor arousal, circulation or dyspnea Acute body weight loss >7.5% Decreased fluid intake or excretion Persistent bile-stained vomiting A first convulsion Periods of apnea Respiratory grunting or central cyanosis A lump >2 cm diameter (abdomen) A petechial rash Blood evident in the feces Fever of >3 days’ duration in a child who is on antibiotics